The
Lamar Boulevard Bridge is one of the main routes across
Lady Bird Lake in downtown Austin, but it offers no dedicated bicycle lanes and only narrow
sidewalks separated from the street by low curbs. As the growth of Austin in the 1980s sent ever-increasing traffic across the bridge, near misses between vehicles, cyclists and pedestrians became increasingly common. In 1991, a drunk driver hit and killed a cyclist on the bridge. By the mid-1990s concerns about the safety of the crossing prompted the city to raise funds through a
municipal bond issuance and a federal
matching funds grant to widen the Lamar bridge and improve its safety design. Early in the design process, however, the
Texas Historical Commission indicated that the overall design of the existing bridge could not be changed, since it had been designated as a historic structure and added to the
National Register of Historic Places in 1994. Community members in stakeholder meetings also generally opposed adding new traffic lanes to the bridge. Instead, in March 1998 the
Austin City Council directed the engineering contractor to explore the possibility of building a separate bridge for pedestrian use. A city design session in May 1998 gathered local architects, engineers, and citizens to propose designs for a pedestrian crossing. The workshop produced, among other options, a design for a bridge with a "double curve" deck connecting the trails on the north and south shores along natural "paths of travel," giving the bridge an hourglass shape and curved connectors.
Extension The original design of the bridge had called for a long northwestern ramp to stretch over
Cesar Chavez Street and connect to the
Lance Armstrong Bikeway and downtown, but budget limitations led to the elimination of that section from the original construction in 2000–2001. Construction on the new connector began on March 15, 2010 and was completed on March 1, 2011. ==Design==